According to Bob Keyes, > > > On Mon, 27 Oct 2003, Tim Pozar wrote: > > > http://www.techweb.com/wire/story/TWB20031024S0011 > > > > Urban Wi-Fi Gridlock Predicted To Arrive in 2004 > > October 24, 2003 (5:54 p.m. EST) > > By W, David Gardner, TechWeb News > > The sky is falling! Well sure. It's getting crowded, at least it is here > in the Boston area. But that doesn't mean everything is going to crash. > What needs to happen is a few things like getting off of one of the > default channels, and having everyone set their access points to send less > beacons. One every 5 seconds should be sufficient. Also I've seen a lot of > broadcast traffic from wired to wireless segments because they're bridged > together, this creates more pollution too. > > 802.11a still has plenty of room, ... ...
Especially since the 802.11a products seem to have mostly disappeared from store shelves in favor of 802.11g, which is on another band entirely. -- general wireless list, a bawug thing <http://www.bawug.org/> [un]subscribe: http://lists.bawug.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless
